Gov. Mike DeWine signed a major overhaul of state election laws on Friday that will require voters to present a photo ID at the polls.
Under the new law, voters must present a photo ID when they cast their ballot in person, although the ID doesn't need to have their current address on it. Qualifying IDs include an Ohio driver's license, state ID, U.S. passport, passport card, military ID or interim identification issued by the Bureau of Motor Vehicles.
Voters could previously use alternative forms of identification at the polls, such as utility bills or bank statements.
As part of the new rules, any Ohioans 17 and older will be eligible to receive a free state ID card. Ohio licenses and ID cards must also note if the person is not a U.S. citizen.The law also:
- Requires completed mail-in ballots to arrive within four days of Election Day, instead of 10.
- Requires voters who want to vote by mail to submit an application at least seven days before Election Day, instead of three.
- Permits only one ballot drop box per county that's installed at the county board of elections office.
- Eliminates in-person voting the Monday before Election Day and reallocates those hours to another time.
- Gives provisional voters until four days after the election to provide missing information to election officials, instead of seven days.
- Give boards of elections until eight days after the election to determine whether provisional ballots can be counted.
- Eliminates most special elections in August unless the county, municipality or school district is under a fiscal emergency.
- Prohibits curbside voting, unless the voter has a disability and is unable to enter their polling place.
- Allows all 17-year-olds to serve as election officials, not just high school seniors.
If all printers were determined not to print anything till they were sure it would offend nobody, there would be very little printed. -- Benjamin Franklin
Friday, January 6, 2023
Last Call For Ohio Takes Your Vote
The Ohio GOP's first order of business: permanently disenfranchising Black voters in the state's largest urban counties with photo ID requirements and by limiting all counties to one early voting drop box.
Nearly every one of these measures is designed to make it more difficult for voters in large, urban counties like Hamilton and Cuyahoga to vote, particularly if they are not able to vote in person, or unable to spend a day at the DMV getting a state ID. The citizenship requirement is also there to scare off Hispanic voters.
Ohio remains one of the most lawless states in the nation when it comes to the GOP ignoring state supreme court rulings and vote suppression tactics, and there's zero reason to believe things will improve in the state at all.
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